A HEALTHY DIET - WUR · cessation, diet, or physical activity. There were also no effects on any...

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A HEALTHY DIET

But what works for me personally?

Baukje de RoosDeputy Director, the Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom

b.deroos@abdn.ac.uk │ www.abdn.ac.uk/rowett

Question 1

If everyone would simply stick to dietary

recommendations, most people would age healthily and

avoid chronic diseases such as heart disease and cancer

A Yes

B No

C It’s not that simple really…

Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) as the ‘gold standard approach’

to assess the efficacy of diet and drugs in the prevention

and treatment of diseases in target populations

Guidelines for medical treatments and

dietary recommendations which have

proven efficacy at the population level

Measure the average change in

the level of a risk factor/biomarker

in the treatment group as

compared with the control group

?Many of the large randomised controlled trials have effectively

demonstrated that only ~40% of a cohort responds to dietary interventions…

De Roos and Brennan, Nutrients 2017;9:E847

Efficacy of wheat & oats to lower blood pressure

Tighe P et al, Am J Clin Nutr. 2010;92:733-740

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REFINED

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WHEAT + OATS

PRECISION

NUTRITION

Could we, somehow, predict who will be responding to

certain foods or diets, and who won’t?

Would it be more effective to promote healthy eating if

people, somehow, could make better informed dietary

choices, based on their genotype, metabotype, current

dietary intake, or on their environment?

polyphenolscarotenoidesglucosinolatesphytosterols

Plant food bioactives

Bioavailability Biological responsiveness

Main determinants

for inter-individual

variations ?

Epigenetics

Gender

Dietary habits

……

Age

Genetics

Gut microbiota

Cardiometabolic health

Inter-individual variability in response to plant bioactives

Dietary advice based on DNA

Single genotypes have generally poor predictive values

Thus far we have only 2 properly controlled dietary intervention studies that have shown a diet -

genotype – phenotype relationship:

•Riboflavin lowers blood pressure in cardiovascular disease patients homozygous for the MTHFR

677C→T polymorphism.

•Long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids have a greater triacylglycerol-lowering action in males than

in females, and there was a trend toward greater responsiveness in apolipoprotein E4 carriers

Carol P Wilson et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2012;95:766-772 / Horigan et al, J Hypertension 2010;28:478-486 Muriel J Caslake et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2008;88:618-629

Prediction of glycaemic responses

Zeevi et al, Cell 2015; 163:1079Nirupa R Matthan et al. Am J Clin Nutr 2016;104:1004-1013

N-of-1 studies, the power of replicates

Schork et al, Annu Rev Nutr 2017;37:395-422

Power of replicates in gut microbiome studies

Walker A et al, ISME Journal 2011;5:220-230

- Ruminococcus bacteria play an essential role in the initial breakdown of fibres to allow cross-feeding

- Ruminococcus is a keystone species – without this bacteria the fibre remains unavailable to other bacteria

Could we, somehow, predict who will be responding to

certain foods or diets, and who won’t?

Would it be more effective to promote healthy eating if

people, somehow, could make better informed dietary

choices, based on their genotype, metabotype, current

dietary intake, or on their environment?

Level 0 Level 1 PN Level 2 PN Level 3 PN

• Generic

healthy eating

guidelines

• Dietary intake• Dietary intake

• Phenotype

• Dietary intake

• Phenotype

• Genotype

Generic Personalised

Baseline Month 3 Month 6Month 2Month 1

Dietary data

Physical activity

Blood sample

DNA sample

Following a 6-month intervention,

participants randomized to

personalised nutrition arms

consumed less red meat, salt and

saturated fat, increased folate intake

and had higher Healthy Eating Index

scores than those randomized to the

control arm

There was no evidence that

including phenotypic and phenotypic

plus genotypic information

enhanced the effectiveness of the

personalised nutrition advice

Carlos Celis-Morales et al, Int J Epidem 2017;46:578–588

Marteau et al, BMJ 2016; 352

Meta-analysis revealed no significant effects of communicating DNA based risk estimates on smoking

cessation, diet, or physical activity. There were also no effects on any other behaviours (alcohol use,

medication use, sun protection behaviours, and attendance at screening or behavioural support

programmes) or on motivation to change behaviour.

DNA-based disease risk and risk-reducing behaviour

Precision Medicine versus Precision Nutrition

Precision Medicine

$$$

Precision Nutrition

Physician versus customer driven interventions

Health belief model: health behaviours are more likely to be adopted if the related benefit are

perceived as high, whilst individual burdens (“costs”) are low

Question 2

Consumption of an ‘unhealthy diet’ - assuming this could be

determined in an objective way - should be classified as a high

risk behaviour and therefore be penalised with an increased

health insurance premium

A Yes

B No

C Perhaps only in ‘older’ people…

Acknowledgements

www.nugo.org

NuGO week 2018 in Newcastle, United Kingdom

Mitochondria and Health

2-5 September 2018